Fukushima dismantling enters critical stage

FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI NUCLEAR POWER PLANT, Japan: Nuclear engineers in Japan are readying to move uranium and plutonium fuel rods at Fukushima, in their most difficult and dangerous task since the plant’s runaway reactors were brought under control two years ago.

Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) is expected this month to begin taking out fuel rods from a pool inside a reactor building at the tsunami-hit plant, in a technically challenging operation that will test the utility’s know-how after months of setbacks and glitches.

Experts said that the operation is a tricky but essential step in the decades-long decommissioning process after the worst atomic accident in a generation.

But they added that it pales in comparison with the much more complex task that awaits engineers who will have to remove the mis-shapen cores of three reactors that went into meltdown, probably relying on technology that has not yet been invented.

More than 1,500 nuclear fuel assemblies—bundles of rods—need to be pulled out of the storage pool where they were being kept when the tsunami smashed into Fukushima in March 2011.

The reactor the pool serves—No. 4—was not in operation at the time but hydrogen from Reactor No. 3 escaped into the building and exploded, tearing the roof off and leaving it at the mercy of natural hazards like earthquakes, storms or another tsunami.

Tepco said that it has not yet found any damage to the assemblies at No. 4, which contain a mixture of uranium and plutonium, but will be monitoring for abnormalities.

The removal of fuel is part of regular work at any nuclear power plant, but “conditions are different from normal because of the disaster,” said company spokeswoman Mayumi Yoshida.

“It is crucial. It is a first big step toward decommissioning the reactors,” she said.

“Being fully aware of risks, we are determined to go ahead with operations cautiously and securely,” Yoshida added.

Little room for error
Chunks of debris that were sent flying into the pool by explosions have largely been removed and a crane has been installed. A protective hood has been erected over the building’s skeleton to contain any radioactive leaks.

A remotely controlled grabber will sink into the pool and hook onto a fuel assembly, which it will pull up and place inside a fully immersed cask.

The 4.5-meter bundles weighing 300 kilograms (660 pounds) have to be kept in water throughout the operation to keep them cool.

The 91-ton cask will then be hauled from the pool—containing as many as 22 fuel assemblies and a lot of water—to be loaded onto a trailer and taken to a different storage pool, where the operation will be reversed.

Experts warned that any slip-ups could quickly snowball, and even minor mishaps will create considerable delays to the already long and complicated decommissioning.

If the rods are exposed to the air they could heat up, a process that if left unchecked could lead to a self-sustaining nuclear reaction. Tepco said that that is unlikely, but skeptics said that with so many unknowns in the novel operation, there is potential for a catastrophe.

“This is the first practical milestone for the project,” said Hiroshi Miyano, a nuclear systems expert and visiting professor at Hosei University in Tokyo.

“Any trouble in this operation will considerably affect the timetable for the entire pro-ject,” he said.

“This is an operation Tepco cannot afford to bungle,” Miyano added.

His comments reflect an increasingly widespread view that the giant utility is not capable of dealing with the mess its nuclear plant has created.

Months of setbacks have included multiple leaks from tanks storing the water used to keep reactors cool, and a power outage caused when a rat electrocuted itself on a circuit board.

Tepco’s management of the problems has been criticized as haphazard and uncoordinated, with one government minister saying that it was like watching someone playing “whack-a-mole.”

The full decommissioning of Fukushima is likely to take decades and include tasks that have never been attempted anywhere in the world.

Meanwhile, villages and towns nearby remain largely empty, their residents unable or unwilling to return to live in the shadow of the leaking plant because of the fear of radiation.